Sunday, December 26, 2010

The chief negotiator of the government's promise of a new popularity in the Philippines to address the poverty and corruption, could strengthen the upcoming peace talks with the rebels and make the link the communist insurgency in the country, which turned on Sunday, 42 - Davao, Philippines (AFP).
Celebrated the anniversary of the camps in the jungle with a pledge to intensify attacks - the New People's Army guerrillas - one of the Maoist forces in Asia, more flexible, and decades of military campaigns permanent.
But behind the scenes, negotiators have agreed on both sides already on the resumption of the talks after six years - the fruits of political goodwill and optimism that followed the May elections of reformist President Benigno Aquino III.
The chief government negotiator Alexander Aquino Padilla represents a "new dynamics" in the Philippines, told the Associated Press this week.
Padilla said that Aquino, who has the support across the political spectrum as a son of revered symbols of democracy, inject honesty and good faith and to call for strong reforms and human rights in the peace talks, which often undermine public confidence and support the weak.
"This could be the best chance of the other party can come with really a political settlement," Padilla said of the talks to be held in February.
Generated by the Cold War in the late 1960s, emerged as the insurgency in rural areas on the basis of Communist Party-led underground in the Philippines, the danger of this nation in Southeast Asia the most dangerous security, stoked by decades of poverty and unrest agricultural, and government corruption and mismanagement. Five presidents failed to crush the Maoist insurgency that has killed at least 120,000 civilians and combatants.
Dates from the party split from the Communist group, the oldest in the Conference on December 26, 1968, in the northern province of Pangasinan. That date was also rejoicing the birth of 75 for China's Mao Tse-Tung.
Washington has blacklisted the Communist Party and its armed wing, the 5000-strong New People's Army, and terrorist organizations, and blaming them for separate attacks killed four members of the U.S. Army in the 1980s.
The rebels pulled out of peace talks brokered by Norway in 2004, and then doubt government of President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo of instigating their inclusion on lists of the United States and the European Union, a terrorist group.
Since taking office, Aquino began to address widespread government corruption and human rights violations blamed on state security forces that have helped to generate the insurgency.
Padilla said the President understands the concerns of the rebels. Led his mother, and former President Corazon Aquino, the 1986 "people power" that toppled the protest of former dictator Ferdinand Marcos, the declaration of martial law in 1972 provided fodder for the insurgency as students, farmers and middle class swelling ranks of some 25000.
After the restoration of democracy, and the opening of Corazon Aquino talks with the rebels, but quickly failed. I have drained the battle setbacks, factionalism and the surrender of their power, but they still claim a presence in all 81 provinces of the Philippines.
New People's Army and the Government is working in the shadow areas under its influence, and conduct trials - and sometimes death - from the police and village officials accused of hurting people. The rebels also collect "revolutionary taxes" - and to punish businesses refused to pay.
Aquino won rare praise from the rebels when he was recently dropped the charges against the workers in the field of Health 43, who claimed they were tortured in military custody after being arrested and 10 suspected insurgents for months.
Padilla said that the rebels - and faced with the collapse of many communist countries that supported and inspired, with a leader of the popular new national viewed as addressing social inequality - may fade soon to futility if they continue to wage protracted war.
He pointed out that he was elected left-wing extremists in Congress until after the abandonment of armed struggle.
He said rebel spokesman George Madlos repressive conditions in the country, which was reinforced by poverty, corruption and violations of rights has been under Aquino.
"We will continue to launch the revolution that is right and we are in a position to intensify attacks," Madlos said in a statement this week, before the anniversary on Sunday.
Despite sporadic fighting, including that killed 10 army soldiers in an insurgent ambush on Dec 14, the two sides agreed to resume formal talks February 15 to 21 in the Norwegian capital, Oslo. They also agreed to a truce Holiday Birth through Jan. 3.
Army, meanwhile, eased the counterinsurgency strategy, which has been linked to the operations of extrajudicial killings of hundreds of leftist activists and sympathizers with the rebel suspects.
Unveiled a new program for six years in the past week seeking to exclude civil society from the rebels and includes support for advocacy groups outside the government in addressing human rights concerns.
He said political analyst Ramon Casiple it showed that part of the army 120,000 soldiers and agreed to adhere to human rights guarantees.
"It's no longer a body count approach, and this is a war for the hearts and mind," said Casiple. "We should realize that the rebels the ground is shifting."
He criticized the Communist Party of the new plan. In a statement this week, and said it "will keep the revolution to generate even a puppet, corrupt the entire system is brought down to the retro."


0 comments:

Post a Comment